The marketing tells you crypto is a generational wealth opportunity. The data tells you most people who touch it lose money, and the ones who don’t usually held something boring for a long time. Both can be true, and the gap between them explains almost all the disappointment in this asset class.
The honest version is that crypto produces a small number of large winners, a larger number of small winners, and a much larger number of losers. The distribution is brutal, and it’s brutal by design.
Trading is a negative-sum game
Spot crypto trading is a zero-sum game before fees. After fees, spreads, slippage, and the gas costs baked into every on-chain move, it’s negative-sum. Most retail traders think they’re competing against other humans. They’re competing against market-making firms with co-located servers and latency advantages measured in milliseconds.
Multiple academic studies of retail crypto traders converge on the same answer: roughly seventy to ninety percent lose money over any meaningful window. The Bank for International Settlements analyzed app-level data and found that the majority of users entered after price peaks and sold during drawdowns, which is the opposite of what works. The distribution is consistent with broader retail trading research in equities and forex. Crypto’s volatility just compresses the timeline.
Holders beat traders, but most people aren’t holders
The people who genuinely made money in Bitcoin are mostly people who bought it years ago, forgot about it, and didn’t trade. That’s a different activity from what most retail participants actually do, which is rotate between coins, chase narratives, and exit positions during drawdowns. Holding is psychologically harder than it sounds because the asset can lose seventy percent of its value in a quarter and you have to do nothing.
The behavioral problem is that “buy and hold” is boring, and crypto culture rewards activity. Twitter feeds, Discord servers, and influencer pitches all push users toward the activity that produces losses. The infrastructure of the space is optimized for trading volume, not investor outcomes, because trading volume is what gets paid.
The lottery structure is the actual product
The handful of stories about someone turning a small position into life-changing money function the same way lottery winners function for state lotteries. They’re the marketing. They’re rare, real, and statistically irrelevant to your expected outcome. The expected return for an average new participant trading altcoins is meaningfully negative; the variance is just high enough that some people get lucky and some people get crushed.
This isn’t a moral judgment about crypto as a technology. It’s a statement about the economics of how most people interact with it. Treating a long-shot bet as a long-shot bet is fine. Treating it as a retirement strategy is where the losses come from.
The takeaway
If you want crypto exposure, decide on a small position, buy something major, hold it for years, and stop checking. Almost everything else people do in this space is paying tuition to market makers in exchange for the experience of feeling like a trader.
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